Is Low-Carb Weight Loss
Really Just Water Loss?
by Craig Whitley
Any weight loss or diet plan,
including low-carb plans like the induction phase of the Atkins
Diet will result in water loss during the first week or
two. However, one of the real beauties of following a
low carbohydrate eating plan is that most of the weight loss
than extends beyond the initial
induction phase of the diet is really from a drop in fat
pounds.
How can this be? Well, when you follow a controlled
carbohydrate eating plan like Atkins or the South Beach Diet,
your body soon switches from burning carbohydrates (which the
diet deprives the body of) to burning fat for energy. In other
words, the majority of the weight loss that occurs beyond the
initial induction phase is really loss of fat that has been
stored in your body.
Contrary to what many skeptics and misinformed persons may
report or say, even if your body sheds water during the first
few days of a controlled carbohydrate diet plan like the South
Beach Diet or Atkins, the body’s water balance soon returns to
normal and the weight loss that follows is the depletion of fat
pounds. This loss of fat reveals itself to one and all in the
form declines in inches (your body measurements) and pounds –
regardless which low-carb diet you follow.
Craig Whitley is the Senior Editor of “Diets and Weight Loss
Plans” – a daily blog for dieters. Visit his website daily to
read the latest news and articles on diets, dieting, weight
loss and obesity. The URL address for Diets and Weight Loss
Plans is http://weightloss.blogdiets.com/blog You
have permission to publish this article electronically on
your website or in print, free of charge, as long as this
resource box with all links and author attribution are kept
intact.
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